In an update to our earlier piece detailing the savagery
which has ensued since the Pacifica National Board has tried to force
unwelcome and restrictive new management and policies on
its San Francisco-area flagship station, KPFA, Pigdog has
learned that KPFA's entire staff was ejected from the radio
station's building tonight, and riot police were called in
to forcibly disperse a crowd estimated at approximately 500
protestors gathered in support of the troubled franchise.

And, as if the current shenanigans weren't enough bad news for KPFA,
uncomfirmed word is filtering in regarding a possible sale of KPFA and/or
sister station WBAI in order to create an "endowment" for Pacifica's national
operation, which would almost certainly mean re-programming, total staff
turnover and a complete format change for a non-Pacifica KPFA, or in other
words, the end of the station as its listeners have come to know it.

In
response to the possibility of such a sale, a group of concerned
community members is poised to file a lawsuit challenging Pacifica's right
to disgorge KPFA's management, which it has already done, and ask for a
reversal of recent management changes.

The forced changes in KPFA's
management is the lightning rod which attracted the recent controversy leading
up to tonight's demonstrations. A chronology of events can
be found at the Save Pacifica site, which, along with Free Pacifica, is
providing breaking information on the brooding radio storm.

As for tonight's
confrontation, a post on Usenet described the forcible removal of KPFA's
"Flashpoints" host Dennis Bernstein and news anchor Mark Mericle, while yet
another post, from ultimajock@eudoramail.com, detailed the chaotic scene:

At a few minutes after 6 pm Pacific time this
evening, the KPFA Berkeleyevening news was interrupted by the
sounds of Dennis Bernstein resistingbeing expelled from the
broadcasting studio by the armed guards recentlyhired by the
Pacifica National Board. The confrontatiuon was alsobroadcast on
KFCF Fresno, which directly sattelites KPFA programming.

Bernstein had been in the course of delivering a report on the
currentdispute between KPFA staff and Pacifica, including a
statement byimprisoned commentator Mumia Abu-Jamal and a
recording of the pressconference held this afternoon at which
representatives of the steeringcommittee of the Coalition for a
democratic Pacifica told the press aboutan e-mail message from
Micheal Palmer to Mary Frances Berry, both Pacificaboard members,
discussing the possible closing of KPFA and the sale ofWBAI New
York. FreePacifica lawyer Dan Siegel was also heard speakingabout
a planned law suit by KPFA listeners opposed to Pacifica's recentpolicies and the legal implications of what Palmer's message
proposed.

At this point, while microphones were open,
Bernstein was apprehended and,according to KPFA newscaster Mark
Mericle, "dragged from the studio" bythe guards. Bernstein was
heard over the air shouting that the guardswould "have to shoot
me then to get me out of the building." After a fewseconds'
silence, an audibly shaken Mericle continued the broadcast,explaining that Bernstein had been "placed on administrative leave"
andthat KPFT Houston station manager Garland Gatner had been
brought to theBay Area to take over operations at KPFA. As
Mericle then attempted tocontinue Bernstein's interrupted report,
the KPFA signal went silent;after a few minutes, a taped lecture
by Eric Mann was broadcast.

Although
later reports
suggested that Bernstein, Mericle and other KPFA staffers had been arrested
during the "siege" (charges unknown,) conflicting reports have emerged which
suggest Bernstein and others thought to have been ejected had managed to work
their way back into the station's building, where they remained as of the time
of this report ensconsed inside the studio with as many as 20 protesters, and
where they reportedly plan to remain until forcibly removed by the Berkeley
Police Department.

Clearly, the strange saga of KPFA has not yet reached its
final chapter, and Pigdog will stay on the story as further details emerge.